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Engineering Tunable Broadband Near‐Infrared Emission in Transparent Rare‐Earth Doped Nanocrystals‐in‐Glass Composites via a Bottom‐Up Strategy
Author(s) -
Pan Qiwen,
Cai Zhenlu,
Yang Yerong,
Yang Dandan,
Kang Shiliang,
Chen Zhi,
Qiu Jianrong,
Zhan Qiuqiang,
Dong Guoping
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced optical materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.89
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 2195-1071
DOI - 10.1002/adom.201801482
Subject(s) - materials science , photoluminescence , optoelectronics , nanocrystal , broadband , photonics , luminescence , doping , ion , nanoscopic scale , infrared , quenching (fluorescence) , nanotechnology , optics , fluorescence , physics , quantum mechanics
Applications of trivalent rare earth (RE 3+ )‐doped light sources in solid‐state laser technology, optical communications, biolabeling, and solar energy management have stimulated a growing demand for broadband emission with flexible tunability and high efficiency. Codoping is a conventional strategy for manipulating the photoluminescence of active RE 3+ ions. However, energy transfer between sensitizers and activators usually induces nonradiative migration depletion that brings detrimental luminescent quenching. Here, a transparent framework is employed to assemble ordered RE 3+ ‐doped emitters to extend the emission spectral range by extracting photons from a variety of RE 3+ ions with sequential energy gradient. To block migration‐mediated depletion between different RE 3+ ions, a nanoscopic heterogeneous architecture is constructed to spatially confine the RE 3+ clusters via a “nanocrystals‐in‐glass composite” (NGC) structure. This bottom‐up strategy endows the obtained RE 3+ ‐doped NGC with high emission intensity (nearly one order of magnitude enhancement) and broadband near‐infrared emission from 1300 to 1600 nm, which covers nearly the whole low‐loss optical communication window. Most crucially, NGC is a versatile approach to design tunable broadband emission for the potential applications in high‐performance photonic devices, which also provides new opportunities for engineering multifunctional materials by integration and manipulation of diverse functional building units in a nanoscopic region.